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Therapeutic modality

ACT

Third-generation therapy based on Relational Frame Theory that seeks to increase psychological flexibility through acceptance of difficult internal experiences and commitment to value-driven actions.

Definition

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT, pronounced as the word "act") was developed by Steven C. Hayes and colleagues from Relational Frame Theory (RFT), a functional theory of language and cognition. ACT does not attempt to directly reduce symptoms — it seeks to change the relationship the client has with their thoughts, emotions, and sensations, increasing what Hayes calls "psychological flexibility."

How it's used

ACT works through six core therapeutic processes, grouped into two categories:

Openness — what the client learns to do with difficult experiences:

Presence — the foundation from which one operates:

Commitment — the direction of change:

When to apply

ACT has evidence for depression, anxiety, chronic pain, addictions, work-related stress, and conditions where more directive approaches have generated resistance. It is especially useful when the client has "tried everything" and the attempt to control symptoms has become the problem.

Historical origin

Steven Hayes, professor at the University of Nevada, began developing ACT in the 1980s from radical behavioral psychology. The first edition of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (Hayes, Strosahl and Wilson) was published in 1999 and is considered the foundational text. ACT is part of the "third wave" of behavioral therapies, alongside DBT, MBCT, and behavioral activation therapy.

How CauceOS supports it

CauceOS includes an ACT note template that records the processes worked in session, the defusion or acceptance exercises used, and the values clarification performed. Alerts can be configured to detect intense cognitive fusion language or marked experiential avoidance.

References

How does CauceOS use this?

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